What We Do

Digitization

The Digitization Centre works in collaboration with UBC departments, UBC Library branches and other groups within the UBC community to build our digital collections. We also partner with public libraries and archives throughout British Columbia and academic institutions around the world to create the digital resources available through our Open Collections. These partnerships make our work possible by providing access to rare and unique materials worth preserving.

In accordance with our digital collection development policy, we are interested in building our collections in the following broad areas: British Columbiana, materials which directly support the curriculum, Faculty and Student research output, the material record of the University, and those materials which are considered to be rare or unique.

Digital Collection Development Policy

Last revised October 6, 2010

More icon.gif Digitization Strategy Vision

The University of British Columbia Library is a collaborator and leader in the creation, access and preservation of digital materials. The Library’s Digitization Centre embraces new technology, methods of access, workflows and preservation strategies while building sustainable digital collections to support and enrich the educational, cultural and economic endeavors of the University, the People of British Columbia and communities beyond.

More icon.gif Collection Review Criteria and Questions

Value

1. Does the material have intrinsic value to current students, researchers or the broader community?
2. Is the material something already collected by the Library – does it deepen, broaden or enhance a current collection? Does it build on a current digital collection?
3. Does the material reside in a collection area that is weak or non-existent and does it offer potential research value for possible future programs at the University?
4. Does the material offer possibilities for funding, creating partnerships and collaborations which in themselves strengthen the Library in some way?
5. Is the material likely to be transitory in its current format? E.g. print, audio tape, video tape, cd-rom, dvd, data sets, film, etc. Would digitizing it create value for future research?

Usefulness

1. Does the material support the teaching and research functions of the institution?
2. Does the material support teaching and research within the province?
3. Does the material support broader teaching and research initiatives?
4. What is the likely demand for the material?

Access

1. By reformatting (print, audio tape, video etc.) or placing material in repositories is access broadened? E.g. better metadata for subject access etc.
2. Is material that is fragile in the current format (print, audio, cd, dvd, film) likely to be used more in a digital format?
3. Does the material create a virtual collection of geographically scattered materials?
4. Does the target material duplicate resources already available digitally elsewhere? Could the Library simply point to their use?

Potential

1. Does the material help the Library to strengthen its mandate to explore, research and create using new technologies and formats? (see Digitization Strategy Vision)
2. Does the material provide opportunities for new collaborations?
3. Does the material provide an opportunity to develop and enhance mechanisms for access: metadata, new formats, new tools in scholarly communication etc.?

Available Resources and Technical Feasibility

1. Are there sufficient financial and human resources to complete the entire project?
2. If the project must be done in phases is it likely that there will be resources to complete them?
3. Comparing the resources consumed by the target project to other available projects are there compelling reasons to choose this project over another - preservation, access, value to present or future researchers etc.
4. Is the project ongoing for the foreseeable future? What are the ongoing resource cost estimates for a 3-5 year window?
5. Are the technical challenges so large that the project is likely to become unwieldy or unsustainable? Is the project, as it is currently conceived, simply impossible to do because of the technical challenges?
6. Is it possible to automate much of the technical side of the project to avoid overly labour intensive workflows?
7. What resources are likely to be needed for the ongoing curation of the material?
8. Are there technical issues around curation which need to be considered?

Rights Issues

1. Does the Library hold copyright for the material to be digitized?
2. Does the Library have written documentation from the rights owner allowing it to hold a digital copy of the material?
3. Does the Library require any other permission prior to embarking on the project?

More icon.gif Process

After reviewing the various questions the decision makers will weight criteria under “Value and Usefulness” as essential but the deciding factors are really under “Access and Potential” as most projects would likely stand up to the scrutiny of “Value and Usefulness”. In prioritizing projects there should be elements from all criteria present. The issue of available resources and technical feasibility must always be considered and factored into the final decision and lack of resources or technical complexity may be the final deciding factors regardless of the merit of the project.

If you are a member of the UBC community and you have a project that you think fits these parameters, please submit the Project Approval Form online. We recommend that you contact the Digitization Centre prior to submitting your proposal so we can assist in answering any questions you may have.

Digital Preservation

Archivematica

Ensuring the long-term accessibility and usability of all of the UBC Library’s digital materials will require a holistic, institution-wide approach to define and implement a persistent digital collections strategy. The Library has developed this strategy in collaboration with Vancouver-based Artefactual Systems http://www.artefactual.com/.

The persistent digital collections implementation plan developed for UBC Library consists of using the open-source Archivematica digital preservation system to provide preservation functionality for the Library's digitized and born-digital holdings. This project report describes the plan in detail.

Digital objects produced at the Digitization Centre will be processed through the system to enable long-term management of the resources. Archivematica integrates with our access systems to ensure that preservation will be part of the standard workflow of providing access to our collections.

Archivematica - CONTENTdm Workflow Documentation

Archivematica - AtoM Workflow Documentation

LOCKSS

UBC Library is a founding member of the COPPUL Private LOCKSS Network, a project initiated by the Council of Prairie and Pacific University Libraries (COPPUL). The mission of the COPPUL PLN is to preserve digital collections of local interest to COPPUL members that are not being preserved elsewhere. UBC Library preserves our hosted OJS journals in the PLN.

Digital Preservation Sub-Committee

UBC Library has been working to implement digital preservation strategies and tools since 2011. The Digitization Centre has successfully piloted and implemented Archivematica as well as conducted a TRAC self-audit. In order to build on this existing work and to include relevant stakeholders in planning infrastructure, the Digital Preservation Working Group was formed under the auspices of UBC Library's Collections and Information Resources Standing Committee.

The Digital Preservation Working Group oversaw and provided expertise on the policies and documentation of UBC Library's Digital Preservation Strategy. The Working Group reviewed, revised and adopted existing policies, documentation and infrastructure as well was created new polices, documentation and infrastructure as necessary for the digital preservation of UBC Library's locally produced digital assets. The Digital Preservation Working Group presented its Final Report with deliverables and recommendations in August 2016 to the Collections and Information Resources Standing Committee. As a result, the working group has now transitioned to a sub-committee and increased its membership to reflect the broad applications to the Library.

To view all of our Digital Collection and Preservation Policies, please visit the UBC Library's Policies, Procedures and Guidelines webpage.

Web Archiving

The University of British Columbia Library has been archiving freely available web content for preservation and access since 2013. The goal of this web archiving service is to ensure that web content that contributes to the University’s research, teaching and learning is preserved and accessible over time. This includes online content that may constitute the institution’s corporate memory.

Archive-It

Archive-It is a web archiving service from the Internet Archive that the University of British Columbia Library is using to harvest, build, and preserve collections of web content and make them available to users.

Our web collections can be viewed on the UBC Library’s Archive-it page. To learn more about our web archiving service, please see our web archiving information guide.

To suggest a website to add to our collections or to submit an inquiry, please complete this request form.

source: https://wiki.ubc.ca/Library:DigInit_Work_With_Us

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